War, Inc. Movie Review
War, Inc. Review
"War, Inc." Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Joshua SeftelProducer : John Cusak,Vic David,Doug Dearth,Danny Lerner,Grace Loh,Mark Roper,Les Weldon
Screenwiter : Mark Leyner,Jeremy Pikser,John Cusack
Starring : John Cusack,Joan Cusack,Marisa Tomei,Hilary Duff,Ben Kingsley,Dan Aykroyd,Ned Ballamy,Lyubomir Neikov
The road to Hell is paved with good intentions, and in the case of John Cusack's
over-the-top satire of the Iraq War, War, Inc., the intentions are obvious and the
road leads to a particular place in Hell presided over by filmmakers (Stanley Kramer
resides on the throne there) who want to fight the good fight but use a two-by-four
pounded into the back of a viewer's head to emphasize the obvious. As writer/producer/star
of War, Inc. Cusack wants to make a statement about the venality of the United States'
involvement in Iraq and wants to make that statement in the worst way. And, unfortunately,
he does. Cusack attempts to reconceive the hit man premise of Grosse Point Blank as a
lacerating and biting political satire in the vein of Dr. Strangelove or Wag the Dog. Unfortunat
ely, the end result is more along the lines of those disastrous, live-action cartoonish
romps of the stinky 1960s vintage a la John Goldfarb, Please Come Home.
As in Grosse Point Blank, Cusack plays a world-weary hit man, Brand Hauser, who works
for a Halliburton-inspired international corporation that has just completed a contract
on the first 100-percent outsourced road in the fictional Middle Eastern country
of Turaqistan. The head honcho of the corporation is the ex-Vice President (Dan Akyroyd
on a toilet) who orders Hauser into Turaqistan to assassinate the chief Turaqistani
minister, Omar Sharif (Lyubomir Neikov). Omar plans to one-up the corporation by
installing his own oil pipeline in competition, and the corporation will have none of
that. Hauser arrives under cover as the head of the Brand USA Trade Show, where he
is responsible for a big gala extravaganza starring Yonica Babyyeah (Hilary Duff
in a change of pace role as a sexy, slutty Britney Spears clone; at one point she
moans pointedly after dropping a scorpion down her pants). Also on hand in Turaqistan
is Natalie Hegalhuzen (Marisa Tomei), a Nation-esque reporter who immediately rubs
Hauser the wrong way. Could this be love?
First-time director Joshua Seftel over-stirs this burlesque brew and flattens out
the fizz. Both Seftel and Cusack keep looking over their shoulders making sure to
mine the tale for heart and soft touches to counteract the nastiness. But for any
lacerating satire to work, the filmmakers can't make nice and be afraid of offending anyone
-- they have to square their jaws and drive headlong through the fiery cacophony.
There is no denying the passion, but Cusack/Steftel can't see the forest for the
trees. When the story develops, it is not so much about Turaqistan but about Hauser
and Natalie falling in love and Yonica (in a head-revolving plot twist) reinventing
herself as a child in a nuclear family (when Yonica sings "I'm Gonna Blow You Up,"
she does, but not in a violent sense, more like Ozzie and Harriet).
War, Inc. hums in the throwaway moments that should have been the main event -- tanks
barrel down war ravaged streets advertising Popeye's Fried Chicken, a kick line of
double amputees kick up their prosthetics to "New York, New York," a hooded cab driver
has a photo ID also with a hood over his face, reporters partake of a Turaqistan War
theme park ride to experience brutal combat the Disney World way. But the film constantly
diverges from what is wants to be and gets wound up in nonsensical subplots (a plot
to sell a video of Yonica's wedding night; details on Hauser's past) that devolve
into a grab-bag free-for-all conclusion that would make the most politically liberal
viewer turn reactionary.
War, what is it good for?
Reviewer: Paul Brenner





